Noocenosis: History
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A Noocenosis (alternative spelling noocenose, noocoenosis or noöcenosis) from Greek νόος (noos) — "mind, thought, perception, sense" and κοινός (cenosis) – "common, mutual, shared, joint", is an artificial biological community (biocenosis) built upon a degraded ecosystem. A noocenosis is the result of structural improvements by man and differs from the original, evolutionarily constructed biological community. The concept noocenosis was first used in Russia (spelling: «нооценоз») in the 1990s by the ecologist Victor Vasilievich Petrashov (Петрашов, Виктор Васильевич). Academic use of the term noocenosis is still predominately limited to Post Soviet countries, with a few exceptions. Closely related terms include "Noobiocenosis" and "Noobiogeocenosis". The term "noobiogeocenosis was introduced in the 1970s by the ecologist Stanislav Semenovich Shwarts (Щварц, Станислав Семёнович). The concept noocenosis belongs to the discipline Ecology and was established by the Russian professor and ecologist Victor Vasilievich Petrashov in his 1993 publication Введение в нооценологи (Introduction to Noocenology). Parallel to the ecological characterization based on Petrashov the term has been adopted in other disciplines, including Economics, Industrial Ecology, Agricultural Science, Philosophy and other Humanity studies.

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1. General Characterization

The interdisciplinary use of the term noocenosis, makes it difficult to provide one exclusive definition. The usages of the noocenosis concept can be split into two general groups: the conceptional use of the term in the field of ecology as a fully restored and improved biosphere of second order, and the usage as a social-informational unit in the fields of industrial ecology,[1] agricultural sciences,[2] economics.[3] and humanity studies.[4] The ecological conception of a noocenosis was introduced by Petrashov. In line with Petrashov's original definition; a fully restored and improved biosphere of second order, the ecologists Ekaterina Valerievna Shen and Alexander Edwinovich Wegosky have further developed the concept noocenosis, based on the experience gathered in their own organization, and the works of other naturalists, including Vladimir Ivanovich Vernadsky, Nikita Nikolayevich Moiseyev, and Nikolay Wladimirowitsch Timofeev-Ressovsky.[5] The two characterizations of a noocenosis; as a restored natural complex and a social-informational unit, overlap one another. Wegosky, for instance, also incorporates the social-informational aspect of a noocenosis into the ecological characterization. A noocenosis, being a man-made natural complex, Wegosky further describes as a "nature-regenerating social system".[6]

2. Ecological Characterization: Viktor Vasilievich Petrashov

Viktor Vasilievich Petrashov, Professor at the State University for Agricultural Sciences – Moscow Timirjaev[7] established the concept in the field of ecology. The various publications from Petrashov build the foundation for an ecological understanding of the noocenosis concept. According to Petrashov's definition, a noocenosis is a community of human and non-human organisms, which interact in an artificial habitat (biotope), following the destruction of the original habitat through the actions of man-kind. A noocenosis differs from other man-made, communities of natural organisms (cenoses), such as found in agricultural ecosystems or woodland plantations for economic use because of its complexity. The biodiversity, the territorial expansion of different species and the ecological structure of a noocenosis is comparable with that of the original biocenosis. Therefore, a noocenosis, is a system of "second-order", and has the same complexity as the evolutionary constructed ecosystem.[8]

The level of complexity of a biocenosis can be measured as the sum of the biochemical systems it contains. The stability of an ecosystem is a direct result of the number of species and the number of ecological relationships between these species on their abiotic habitat. As such, an ecosystem in which the biochemical material circulation is constant and includes a great organic mass is generally more resilient. For example, in bio-diverse ecosystems the loss of one species is much more likely to be compensated by another.[9] Thus, the creation of noocenoses includes not only the "repair" of anthropological damages to a natural community, but rather attempts to strengthen the resistance of said community against further disturbances.

Petrashov based the noocenosis conception on the theoretical words of Vladimir Ivanovich Vernadsky, founder of the Noosphere concept as well as Vladimir Nikolayevich Sukachev; the founder of the term "Biogeocenosis" and the correlating field of study.[10] Next to the works of these authors, Petrashov used his own field research as an ecologist in the Russian Federation as the basis for the new concept.[11] Petrashov was greatly influenced by Vladimir Ivanovich Vernadsky and his work on the Noosphere. Petrashov considered that the construction of noocenoses as the active implementation of the noosphere. Therefore, the entirety of all individual noocenosis make up the noosphere in the same way that many biocenoses make up the biosphere. There is a distinct difference separating the noocenosis concept from other forms of nature restoration. A noocenosis differs fundamentally from the results of natural evolution, and therefore not synonymous with the concepts "Ecological Restoration" or "Conservation". In contrast, a noocenosis is a constructed and managed ecosystem which is based on the scientific observation of the previous biocenoses which have been destroyed by man.[12]

Petrashov suggested that the terms "Noogeocenosis" and "Nooecocenosis" be used when the abiotic surroundings and the corresponding ecosystem of a noocenosis community are being studied.[13] A noocenosis, according to Petrashov, is a community of organisms including humans, who take on the role of a "rational creator". When human kind compensates its own damage to the earth's natural ecosystems, giving back energy and substance for the repair of interrupted biochemical systems, it becomes an active member of a noocenosis.[14]

The restoration of natural landscapes includes all processes which increase the biodiversity of a certain biotope. According to Petrashov, the restoration of the original, evolutionarily developed biotope is always preferable. The re-acclimatization of dominant species is, in most cases, easier because these species are already best adapted to the regional conditions. The constructed noocenosis should be, when and where possible, constructed so as to resemble the original biotope, which was destroyed by human-kind. Thus, a noocenosis may be created according to either 1) the type of destroyed biocenosis, 2) characteristics which best match the current phase of the biocenosis in the evolution of biotopes, or 3) the type of biocenosis, which best matches the resulting natural conditions, should the conditions have drastically changed from the original ones.[15]

3. Noobiogeocenosis: Stanislav Semenovich Shwarts

The Russian ecologist Stanislav Semenovich Shwarts used the term noobiogeocenosis in his 1974 publication, almost 20 years before Petrashov's publications on the noocenosis. Shwarts' conception has a few important parallels with Petrashov's, though the latter considered there to be no connection. Shwarts recognized that any attempt to restore biocenoses to their original form is prematurely condemned to failure. Therefore, he saw it to be necessary to rethink the idea of a "good biosphere". He suggested the term "noobiogeocenosis" to characterize newly constructed biocenoses which are equal to their naturally developed predecessors.[16] Further, Shwarts' conception vastly differs from Petrashov's. Shwarts characterizes the work of as an ecologist as following: to create a general scheme for the development of flourishing biogeocenoses in an urbanized environment. This scheme can be implemented as an industrial complex in conjunction with measures for the industrial development of the region and of the country. Schwarts sees a noobiogeocenosis as an aspect of human ecology. The main task of this branch of science is to develop a general scheme for the development of a biogeocenotic cover of a single economic and geographical region.[17] Shwarts's definition of a noobiogeocenosis and the role of ecologists in its creation, is conceptually very close to the modern field of industrial ecology, which has been defined elsewhere as a "systems-based, multidisciplinary discourse that seeks to understand emergent behavior of complex integrated human/natural systems".[18] The field of industrial ecology also focuses on the economic and social impacts of the material exchange between industrial objects and their environment. In the field of industrial ecology, the term noocenosis has been used with reference to Shwarts' original charachterization of a noobiogeocenosis. According to recent literature in this discipline, a noocenosis is simply а human, technical and/or informational unit. The term is used to characterize the relationship between human production systems and the non-human environment. Furthermore, an important differentiation is that a noocenosis is seen as a separate instance from the biocenosis.[19]

In contrast, a noocenosis is, for Petrashov, an ecological concept that focuses on the resilience of a biocenosis, the complexity of its ecological connections and its stage in the line of evolutionary development. All these factors are evaluated within the context of human-industrial degradation of biocenoses, the state which characterizes the modern world. Petrashov views human flourishing not as a goal per se, but rather as the bi-product of flourishing biocenoses. Social development is only possible through the rational construction and maintenance of biocenoses.

4. Noocenology as a Practical Discipline of Ecology

The Russian ecologists Ekaterina Valerievna Shen (Екатерина Валерьевна Шен) and Alexander Edwinovich Wegosky have been continuing and furthering Petrashov's ecological conception. They are practitioners of the new profession, which Petrashov first defined: Noocenology. The profession of a Noocenologist (Russ: Нооценолог) includes the construction of noocenoses. The corresponding specialization is Noocenology (Russ: Нооценология). The specialization is concerned with the construction of flourishing ecosystems of the second degree.[20] As a discipline, noocenology tries to compensate for damage caused by humans by transforming destroyed biocenoses that cannot be restored to their original state. Such destroyed biocenoses are converted into new systems based on the knowledge gained in the study of previous biocenoses.[21] The irreversible character of ecological destruction appears as the central and defining principle of the field. The creation of noocoenoses is therefore a solution tailored to the reality of post-anthropogenic landscapes, which for various reasons can no longer be returned back to their pre-anthropogenic status. The profession of a noocenologist, as Petrashow emphasizes, is in light of the ecological crisis in which the planet finds itself, the only profession that could secure the future of humanity.

Wegosky and Shen have further developed the nocenosis concept as a practical discipline. Both ecologists are members of the Organization: Nature Revive Service – Nonprofit Partnership Service for Ecological Restoration of Degraded Landscapes, an independent and self-sustaining collective aimed at creating noocenoses - man-made socio-biogeosystems on postanthropogenic wastelands.[22] Their definition of a noocenosis differs from that of Petrashov, and is as follows: A noocenosis is

всесторонне продуманный рукотворный социально-природный комплекс, созданный в результате природовозрождающей деятельности на деградированной территории, представляет собой сбалансированную юридически защищённую и экономически самоокупаемую кризисоустойчивую систему. То есть это биоценоз нового уровня, эдификатором - средообразующим фактором в котором являются разумные существа. Принципиально нооценоз отличается от биоценоза тем, что представляет собой лабораторию под открытым небом, стратегической целью которой является решение вопроса не только выживания и адаптации к меняющимся условиям среды (как в биоценозе), но и, в первую очередь, продуманного и сознательного коэволюционного развития всех членов сообщества. В состав нооценоза могут быть включены все виды эманаций, излучаемых членами сообщества, при наличии научно обоснованных доказательств их реального существования.[23]
A comprehensively thought-out man-made social-natural complex, created as a result of nature-regenerating activities on a degraded territory. It is a balanced, legally protected and economically self-sustaining crisis-resistant system. That is to say, it is a biocenosis of a new level. The environment forming factor, or the edifiers, are rational, sentient beings. Fundamentally, a nocenosis differs from a biocenosis in that it is an open-air laboratory, with the strategic goal to solve the problem of not only survival and adaptation to the changing environmental conditions (as in a biocenosis), but, foremostly, to solve the problem of a thoughtful and conscious co-evolutionary development of all community members. The composition of a nocenosis can include all types of emanations emitted by members of the community, in the presence of evidence of their real existence.[24]

Wegosky and Shen's focus on the application of the concept noocenosis goes further than Petrashov's conception and encompasses the legal, economic, social and psychological aspects and barriers of creating noocenoses in a commercial society. In line with the ecologist Moiseyev, who contributed important developments to the Noosphere Theory (See Section The Noospheric era: Nikita Nikolaievich Moiseyev), Wegosky and Shen see systematic structures which inhibit the creation and growth of a new moral imperative, and thus the noospheric era.[25] This is the central theoretical characteristic in which their theoretical conception differs from Petrashov's.

Wegosky's further contends, that consumer civilization hinders the creation of noocenoses as it lacks mature individuals, which act as edifiers and are able to create a rational nature complex based on scientific evidence of material flows and ecosystem development. Ideological limitations, specifically the fulfillment and creation of excess needs in a commercial society, result in production ecosystems, that block out all other options for organizing life, except for the constant improvement of schemes for absorbing resources and distributing the "benefits" of production.[26]

As co-founder of the organization Nature Revive Service – Nonprofit Partnership Service for Ecological Restoration of Degraded Landscapes, active since 1992,[1] Wegosky has developed with Shen the program practical noocenology which deals with the real world creation of noocenoses. These noocenose they refer to as "zones of life-thickening". These spaces are filled with as many protected ecological and social niches as possible.[27] Practical Noocenology draws on Nikolay Timofeev-Ressovsky's conception of biospheric rents. The focus is moved from fiscal profitability to ecological profitability, in which the use of raw material does not exceed the "rent" provided by the planetary substance. The biosphere according to Timofeev-Ressovsky, can be viewed as a giant combine, on which humanity is obliged to live with a certain percentage of 'green turnover'".[28] The destruction of these biospheric rents has been jeopardizing the future existence of the human race for decades and has reached a critical threshold. Noocenology, the creation of noocenoses, should lay the formation of a natural information network, without which it is impossible to solve pressing evolutionary problems.[29]

5. Interdisciplinary Reception

The term noocenosis is currently used in other disciplines other than ecology. This interdisciplinary use of the term differs from the original ecological characterization. For example, in the fields of Industrial Ecology and Agricultural Sciences a noocenosis is a social or economic complex (concretely this means the culmination of society, human labor and the material products of labor). This characterization is closer to Shwarts' concept: Noobiogeocenosis. References to the concept noocenosis in the fields of Economics, Social Sciences and Humanity Studies have, up until now, been limited to references to the character of a noocenosis as an informational network of human thought. Such definitions do not share a foundation with Shwarts' conception of a noobiogeocenosis as the subject of human ecology, not are they related to Petrashov's original ecological characterization: a man-made nature-complex of second order.

The term noocenosis is used almost exclusively in the academic literature of Post-Soviet States. There have been few exceptions in which the concept was referenced by academics in other countries. A few university textbooks of ecology and industrial ecology, written in the Russian or Ukrainian Language, have used the term noocenosis.[30]

5.1. Agricultural Sciences

The Kazakhstan National Agricultural University Almaty lists "noocenosis" as a foundational concept in the ecological education of students of agricultural sciences.[31] Furthermore, the concept is being used in Ukrainian Universities and is referenced in textbooks in the Ukrainian Language.[32] Perhaps the most recent publication concerning the concept noocenosis is from Andre Kayukov (А.Н Каюков), Institute of Land Management, Cadastre- and Environmental Management in Krasnoyarsk. In his 2018 publication, Kazukov defines a Noobiogeocenosis as an artificial ecosystem. A Noobiogeocenosis differs from a biocenosis in that is contains another equally important community: a noocenosis. A noocenosis is made up of society, labor and the products of labor.[33] By putting the needs and demands of the biocenosis at an equal level with those of society ( defined here as noocenosis) Kayukov's conception vastly differences from the ecological conception, in which the flourishing of a biocenosis is the primary goal of human interaction with nature.

5.2. Industrial Ecology

With in the field of Industrial Ecology there are differing conceptions. For one, a noocenosis is generally defined as the social environment, and the degree of its change as a result of mineral and raw materials exchange.[34] On the other hand, the concept has a certain spatial character and is understood as the sphere of human kind in contrast to other spheres made up of plant and animal life and their abiotic habitats. It is a technical and scientific center of material exchange between industrial complexes and natural biocenoses.

A textbook of industrial ecology published by the University of Saratov prefers the term noobiogeocenosis, which it clarifies, is an elementary structure of the noosphere and one the possible systems of interaction between industry and nature. As a system, it includes territory, time, organization and scientific research. As a form of relationship between people and nature, it should enable the rational use of natural resources. The era of the noosphere must be preceded by a profound socio-economic restructuring of society, which is aimed at a careful attitude towards nature. A noobiogeocenosis is made up of even smaller units: a еcotop (here defined as all abiotic components of the environment), a biocenosis (all biotic components of the environment) and a noocenosis (the human- productive component in relationship to the environment). The noocenosis, it further describes as "a social-economic complex", made up of labor, society and the material products of labor.[35] Furthermore a noocenosis is defined by the author as a community of rationalism (сообщества разума). Specifically, this means industrial production systems, that are based on rational principles about the living and non-living environment. The content of what makes a community rational is however, as further stated, determined by the general trajectory of social development.[36][37] The principle of rationality, being determined by the trajectory of social development, once again separates the industrial ecology definition of a noocenosis from the ecological characterization based on Petrashov. Similarly to the reception in the field of agricultural science, this characterization allows the demands of human society to characterize the human relationship to natural objects. In contrast, Petrashov's conception considers the creation and maintenance of flourishing biocenoses to be the basis from which human relationships to nature must be constructed. Not the development of human society dictates the structure of a biocenosis, but the structure and ecological connections of the biocenosis determine the trajectory of social development.

5.3. Economics

Yan Vyacheslavovich Shokin (Ян Вячеславович Шокин ), Professor of Digital Economics and Management at the State University "Dubna", interpreted the concept noocenosis as the result of the natural convergence of economic units with coinciding economic interests. The essence of this interpretation is the a certain wavelength of economic interests, which are connected through a mutual exchange of motivation. Shokin reinterprets the term noocoenosis in the sense of the theory of economic interest to mean the overlap of certain interests in closed economic systems. The noocoenosis retains some loose connection to the biocenosis as it is a unit of the biosphere, in which "the economic activity clearly exceeds that of its surroundings". </ref> Шокин, Я.В. The concept is based on the noosphere concept in which man appears as a rational creator of his environment and has to act within the natural limits of his biosphere. Shokin reinterprets the term noocoenosis in the sense of the theory of economic interest and as an overlap of certain interests in closed economic systems. After all, there remains a noocoenosis as a unit of the biosphere, in which the economic activity clearly exceeds that of its surroundings.[38]

5.4. Humanities

The Russian-American philosopher, literary critic, cultural and linguist Mikhail Epstein introduced the term into the English language, with the following definition:

the totality of ideas, images, mental objects, information fields filling the material environment; the nature of their relationship with each other and with this environment, the process of their interaction, circulation. In the system of scientific concepts, noocenosis refers to the noosphere as a biocenosis refers to the biosphere. Each culture and subculture, professional environment, and social unit develops its own noocenosis, its own way of exchanging ideas, surviving and spreading in the noosphere.[39]

Epstein's definition identifies solely the noocenosis as an informational unit. Any mention of biocenoses are merely metaphorical.

The Publication: „Global studies. International Interdisciplinary Encyclopedic Dictionary." provided a definition of a noocenosis along with four other terms that share the common root "noo": Noobiogeocenosis, Noosphere, and the noospheric, spiritual and environmental assembly of the world, noospheric worldview (нообиогеоценоз, ноосфера, ноосферная духовно-экологическая ассамблея мира, ноосферное мировоззрение).[40]

6. History of the Concept: Extension from the Noosphere

The concept noocenosis is an extension of the philosophical concept: noosphere. The noosphere has been primarily in Russia a topic of study and debate, but has also caught international academic attention in the past 30 years, inspiring many publications [2] and even international conferences. [3]

6.1. Noosphere: Vladimir Ivanovich Vernadsky

The noosphere was predominantly defined by the Russian Biogeochemicist Vladimir Ivanovich Vernadsky as the sphere of (human) reason and the next planetary layer following the biosphere. Other important authors in the creation of the concept include Pierre Teilhard de Chardin and Edourd Le Roy. Vernadsky developed a theory about the trajectory of planetary development, derived from his observation that man-kind is the most relevant geological factor. The specific influence of man-kind on the earth is, he concluded, the result of scientific thought. The extension of communication systems, the creation of new materials, the colonization of the entire planet by the human race, and the geographic changes to planetary landscapes and systems are examples of the geological impact of man kind, and are predicated on man-kind's propensity to scientific thought.[41] Vernadsky theorized that the culmination of evolution will be the onset of the noosphere, which is a scientific and socio-cultural transition of human society as well as a physical transition of the planet's biosphere. The ability for humankind as a species not only to shape the biosphere through scientific thought, work and technology, but also to consciously reflect on itself as a function of the biosphere together make up this new state of planetary organization. Vernadsky saw in the 20th century the onset of the transition to the noosphere. Not only did he witness an onset of technological and scientific progress but Vernadsky claimed that conditions of his time enabled and forced man-kind to, for the first time, recognise himself as an inhabitant of the planet and to act from a planetary point of view.[42] The transition to the noosphere thus encompasses a certain maturity of thought resulting not only in the proliferation of science and technological progress, but fore-mostly the appearance of human reason in relation to the species' planetary role. The development of a reasonable and reflected society would, for the first time, allow man-kind to consciously direct the co-evolution of human society and the biosphere. The noosphere is the active shaping of the planet through reflexive human thought, as far as it is a function of the earth's biogeochemical processes.[43] Furthermore, the noosphere appears as the next planetary layer: the evolution of the biosphere. Vernadsky argued that science, human thought, human labor and technology are part of a greater evolutionary process, and are thus governed by the scientific laws governing all planetary processes. The „alien" environment; the biosphere, exerts stress upon technological progress, so that even the development of machines must follow the same planetary laws which determine the development of all organisms.[44]

6.2. The Noospheric Era: Nikita Nikolaievich Moiseyev

The concept "Noosphere", as a scientific concept, was further developed almost exclusively by Russian authors. A few exceptions can be found among humanities and philosophy academics in western countries. The most notable and influential author to pursue the scientific, Vernadskian conception of the noosphere has been Nikita Nikolaiavich Moiseyev with his publication "Человек и ноосфера" (Man and the Noosphere) in 1990.[45] Moiseyev identified an important contradiction in Vernadsky's theory. Vernadsky described the noosphere as an ultimately irreversible, teleological process, but also stressed the necessity of its active implementation by man-kind.[46] Moiseyev concludes that the latter conception, that is, considering the noosphere as a "project" for human-kind requiring active implementation, best suits the reality emerging in the late 20th century. The epoch of the noosphere requires not only the active transformation of societal structure, but also the development of "a new morality".[47] As such, creating the noosphere requires the radical restructuring of our entire being; the shift of standards and ideals.[48] Moiseyev himself, attempted to contribute towards the active implementation of the noosphere through his participation in environmental and ecological advocacy internationally and within the Soviet Union. Moiseyev's publication was an important transition away from the Vernadskian conception of the Noosphere as an inevitable evolutionary stage, and towards the realization that the onset of noosphere is conditional upon human-kind's ability and willingness to actively implement it.

The content is sourced from: https://handwiki.org/wiki/Philosophy:Noocenosis

References

  1. The use as a social-informational unit in the field of industrial ecology: Копач П.И. Методология экологической оценки технологий при разработке месторождений полезных ископаемых // ГИАБ. №2. 2006. URL: https://cyberleninka.ru/article/n/metodologiya-ekologicheskoy-otsenki-tehnologiy-pri-razrabotke-mestorozhdeniy-poleznyh-iskopaemyh. C. 214. (Translation of the Russian Title: Methodology of environmental technology assessment in the development of mineral deposits / Kopach P.I.). Охрана окружащей среди в нефтепереработке / Кузьмина, Р.И. [и др.] : Изд-во Саратовского Университета, 2007.(Translation of the Russian title: Environmental protection in oil refining / Kuzmina, R.I.). Человек и Общество: Ноосферное Развитие / Василенко В.Н.// Москва-Белгород Изд-во ООО «Лема». 2011. C.436- 437. URL: http://noocivil.esrae.ru/pdf/2013/2/1096.pdf#page=393. (Translation of the Russian title: Man and Society: Noospheric Development / Vasilenko V.N.).
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  4. The use as a social-informational unit in the field of humanities: Epstein, Mikhail & Tulchinksy, G. L. Proektivnyi filosofskii slovar'. Novye terminy i poniatiia St Petersburg: Aleteia. 2003. ISSN/ISBN:5-89329-634-6) (English Version: A Projective Philosophical Dictionary. New Terms and Concepts).
  5. See Выговский, А.Э.: Практическая нооценология, http://oasis-inwaste.asia/accordions/view/prakticheskaya_nootcenologiya. (Translation of the Russian Title: Practical Noocenology / Wegosky A.E). See Петрашов, В.В. 1993 and 1998. See Шен, Екатерина Валерьевна: Нооценолог - профессия будущего, 2016. Online: http://www.nature-revive.org/accordions/view/nootcenolog-professiya_buduschego (Translation of the Russian Title: Noocenologist - a profession of the future / Shen, Ekaterina Valerievna). See Выговский А.Э., Шен Е.В «Ноосфера» и «Нооценоз» (Абстрактное и прикладное толкование понятий с позиций философов и естествоиспытателей), 2017. Online Access: http://www.nature-revive.org/accordions/view/nootcenoz. (Translation of the Russian Title: "Noosphere" and "Noocenosis" (Abstract and applied interpretation of concepts from the perspective of philosophers and natural scientists)// Wegosky A.E., Shen E.V.
  6. Выговский А.Э. Эволюционно прогрессивные формы организации бытия // Ресурсы ноосферного движения. Вып.1. Материалымеждународной конференции. -М.: ГЕОС, 2000. (Translation of the Russian Title: Wegosky A.E./ Evolutionarily progressive forms of organization of being)
  7. ee short Biography https://petrashov-v-v.ucoz.ru/
  8. Петрашов, 1998. 37 C.
  9. Петрашов, 1998, C. 40
  10. Петрашов, 1998, 5 & 32 c.
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  12. Петрашов, 1998. c. 35-37
  13. Петрашов, 1998. 37 C.
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  15. Петрашов В.В. 2012 С. 40.
  16. Щварц С.С. Проблема Экологии Человека // Вопр. Философии. – 1974. – № 9. 1974. C. 109. URL: https://ipae.uran.ru/sites/default/files/publications/ipae/2235_1974_Schwarz.pdf (Translation of the Russian Title: Shwarts S.S. The problem of human ecology).
  17. Щварц С.С. 1974. C. 109.
  18. Allenby, Brad (2006). The ontologies of industrial ecology. Progress in Industrial Ecology. 3 (1/2): 28–40.
  19. See Section: Industrial Ecology
  20. See Петрашов, 1993 and 1998. And: Шен, Екатерина Валерьевна: Нооценолог - профессия будущего. Online: http://www.nature-revive.org/accordions/view/nootcenolog-professiya_buduschego. (Translation of the Russian Title:"Noocenology - The Profession of the Future").
  21. Петрашов, 1998. c. 46
  22. А.Э. Выговский, Л.В. Журавлёва, М.В. Втюрина, НООСФЕРНОЕ МОДЕЛИРОВАНИЕ АЛЬТЕРНАТИВНЫХ ФОРМ БЫТИЯ Служба экологической реставрации, г. Таруса. C.1. Online Access: https://ru.b-ok2.org/book/3062432/fbd9cd (Translation of the Russian Title: A.E. Wegosky, L.V. Zhuravleva, M.V. Vtyurina, NOOSPHERIC MODELING OF ALTERNATIVE FORMS OF BEING
  23. Выговский А.Э., Шен Е.В «Ноосфера» и «Нооценоз» (Абстрактное и прикладное толкование понятий с позиций философов и естествоиспытателей), 2017. Online Access: http://www.nature-revive.org/accordions/view/nootcenoz. (Translation of the Russian Title: "Noosphere" and "Noocenosis" (Abstract and applied interpretation of concepts from the perspective of philosophers and natural scientists)// Wegosky A.E., Shen E.V.
  24. Translated from Russian by author of this article directly from: Выговский А.Э., Шен Е.В «Ноосфера» и «Нооценоз» (Абстрактное и прикладное толкование понятий с позиций философов и естествоиспытателей), 2017. Online Access: http://www.nature-revive.org/accordions/view/nootcenoz. (Translation of the Russian Title: "Noosphere" and "Noocenosis" (Abstract and applied interpretation of concepts from the perspective of philosophers and natural scientists)// Wegosky A.E., Shen E.V.
  25. Выговский and Шен, 2017
  26. Выговский, А.Э.: "Практическая нооценология",Online at: http://oasis-inwaste.asia/accordions/view/prakticheskaya_nootcenologiya
  27. Выговский and Шен, 2017
  28. Шен, 2016
  29. Выговский and Шен, 2017
  30. Экология Учебник / В.Д. Валова / 2. Изд. – М.: Изд-во-торговая корпорация „Дашков и К", 2013 (Translation of the Russian Title: Ecology Textbook / Valova V.D.) ISBN:978-5-394-01752-0. Охрана окружащей среди в нефтепереработке / Кузьмина, Р.И. [и др.] : Изд-во Саратовского Университета, 2007. (Translation of the Russian Title: Environmental protection in oil refining / Kuzmina, R.I.). Основы экологического образования Учебно-методическое пособие / Базаева М.Г. [ и.т.д] // Моковский Государственный Областный Университет – М. Экомир. 2014. (Translation of the Russian Title: Fundamentals of Environmental Education Teaching Aid / Bazaeva MG [ etc]) ISBN:5-09-007683-9.
  31. Танатарова К.Т. Педогогические основы экологического образования и воспитания студентов аграрных вузов / К.Т. Танатарова // Казакстанский национальный аграрный университет Алматы. УДК 378.54 (Translation of the Russian Title: Tanatarova K.T. Pedagogical foundations of environmental education and education of students of agricultural universities) URL: http://nbisu.moy.su/_ld/5/570_Tanatarova_ISU.pdf
  32. Дубровьска, Вікторія Василівна; Шкляр, Віктор Іванович. Термодинаміка та теплообмін. 2016. C.6. (Translation of the Ukrainian Title: Thermodynamics and heat exchange / Dubrovsk, Viktoria Vasilievna; Shklyar, Viktor Ivanovich. ) URL: https://ela.kpi.ua/bitstream/123456789/28252/1/termodynanikateploobmin.pdf.
  33. Каюков А.Н. Исскуссвенные Экосистемы в Приподопользовании / А.Н Каюков // Наука и Образование: Опыт, Проблемы, Перспективы Развития - материалы международной научно-практической конференции – Изд-во Красноярский государственный университет – Красноярск – 2018. С.2.
  34. Копач П.И. Методология экологической оценки технологий при разработке месторождений полезных ископаемых // ГИАБ. №2. 2006. (Translation of Russian Title: The methodology of environmental technology assessment in the development of mineral deposits / Kopach P.I.) URL: https://cyberleninka.ru/article/n/metodologiya-ekologicheskoy-otsenki-tehnologiy-pri-razrabotke-mestorozhdeniy-poleznyh-iskopaemyh. C. 214
  35. Охрана окружащей среди в нефтепереработке / Кузьмина, Р.И. [и др.] : Изд-во Саратовского Университета, 2007. (Translation of the Russian Title: Environmental protection in oil refining / Kuzmina, R.I.).
  36. Охрана окружащей среди в нефтепереработке / Кузьмина, Р.И. [и др.] : Изд-во Саратовского Университета, 2007. (Translation of the Russian Title: Environmental protection in oil refining / Kuzmina, R.I.).
  37. See also Человек и Общество: Ноосферное Развитие / Василенко В.Н. [и др.]// Москва-Белгород Изд-во ООО «Лема». 2011. C.436- 437. URL: http://noocivil.esrae.ru/pdf/2013/2/1096.pdf#page=393.
  38. Шокин, Я.В. Система совместно функционирования ноосферы, техносферы, и эмосферы / Я.В. Шокин // Риск: Ресурсы, Информация, Снабжение, Конкуренция. – 2012 – № 2. – (Translation of the Russian Title: A system for the joint functioning of the noosphere, technosphere, and atmosphere) С. 400-402. ISSN: 0130-3848
  39. Эпштейн, 2017.*See Entry "нооценоз". First published in: Эпштейн, Михаил: Проективный словарь гуманитарных наук, OOO Новое Литературное Обозрение, 2017, (Übersetzung des russischen Titels: Epstein, Michael: Projective Dictionary of Humanities). https://e-libra.ru/read/496189-proektivnyy-slovar-gumanitarnyh-nauk.html
  40. Глобалистика. Международный междисциплинарный энциклопедический словарь. Гл. ред. И.И. Мазур, А.Н. Чумаков, М. –СПб. –Н.-Й.: ИЦ «ЕЛИМА», ИД, «Питер», 2006. 1160 C. (Translation of the Russian Title: Global studies. International Interdisciplinary Encyclopedic Dictionary. Main Editor Mazur, A.N. Chumakov) cited in : Человек и Общество: Ноосферное Развитие / Василенко В.Н. [и др.]// Москва-Белгород Изд-во ООО «Лема». 2011. C.436- 437. (Translation of the Russian Title: Man and Society: Noosphere Development / Vasilenko V.N. [etc.] URL: http://noocivil.esrae.ru/pdf/2013/2/1096.pdf#page=393.
  41. Vernadsky, Vladimir Ivanovich: Some Words About The Noosphere, in: 150 Years of Vernadsky: The Noosphere (Volume 2), Creative Space, 2014. (Original:Несколько слов о ноосфере, translated by George Vernadsky and Rachel Douglas) p. 20 and 40.
  42. Vernadsky, Vladimir Ivanovich: Scientific Thought as a Planetary Phenomenon, Moscow, Nongovernmental Ecological V.I.'Vernadsky Foundation, 1997, (Original: Научная мысль как планетное явление, translated by B.A. Starostin) 1997. p. 40.
  43. See Vernadsky, Vladimir Ivanovich: Some Words About The Noösphere, in: 150 Years of Vernadsky: The Noosphere (Volume 2), Creative Space, 2014. (Original:Несколько слов о ноосфере, translated by George Vernadsky and Rachel Douglas); See Vernadsky, Vladimir Ivanovich: Scientific Thought as a Planetary Phenomenon, Moscow, Nongovernmental Ecological V.I.'Vernadsky Foundation, 1997, (Original: Научная мысль как планетное явление, translated by B.A. Starostin) 1997
  44. Vernadsky,1997. p. 36.
  45. Моисеев, Никита Николаевич: Человек и ноосфера, Молодая гвардия, 1990
  46. Моисеев, 1990. 24 с.
  47. Моисеев, 1990. 24 с.
  48. Моисеев, 1990. 24 с.
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